Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Soon, corns to grow in caves, mines

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 May, 2014 02:00 PM
  • Soon, corns to grow in caves, mines
In view of growing concerns about genetically modified crops cross-contaminating other crops, scientists have now devised a way to grow dwarf corn stalks in caves and abandoned mines without affecting their yield.
 
Lowering temperatures for two hours each day reduces the height of corn without affecting its seed yield, the study showed.
 
"It is an affordable, non-chemical means of taking genetically modified crops to harvest maturity without getting any kind of pollen or seed into the ecosystem," said Cary Mitchell, professor of horticulture at Purdue University in the US.
 
For their experiment, the researchers installed a growth chamber with insulation and yellow and blue high-intensity discharge lamps in a former limestone mine in Marengo, Indiana, to test how corn would react to an environment in which its growing conditions - light, temperature, humidity and carbon dioxide - were tightly controlled.
 
To their surprise, the hybrid corn responded by growing "too well".
 
“Productivity in a controlled environment is superior to that in the field, and you can raise more than one crop per year,” Mitchell maintained.
 
Controlled environment agriculture would be one of the big movements of the 21st century, he added.
 
The technique could be particularly useful for growing transgenic crops to produce high-value medicinal products such as antibodies for the budding plant-derived industrial and pharmaceutical compounds industry.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Vitamin D deficiency may lead to prostate cancer: Study

Vitamin D deficiency may lead to prostate cancer: Study
Get under the morning sun sooner rather than later as vitamin D deficiency has now been linked to aggressive prostate cancer, an alarming study indicated.

Vitamin D deficiency may lead to prostate cancer: Study

Where butterflies, bees feed on crocodile tears!

Where butterflies, bees feed on crocodile tears!
Look at those crocodile tears in your kid's eyes more carefully. These are an abundant source of salt and other rare minerals and proteins for some!

Where butterflies, bees feed on crocodile tears!

Babies learn to recognise pictures before first birthday!

Babies learn to recognise pictures before first birthday!
If a mother shows her nine month-old baby a picture of her husband fighting a war in a distant land, she may find to her surprise that if he comes back soon after, the baby may well recognise the person in the picture.

Babies learn to recognise pictures before first birthday!

Men! Women prefer courtship over competitiveness

Men! Women prefer courtship over competitiveness
What do women prefer, lovers or fighters? The truth is out. Females prefer courtship over competitiveness.

Men! Women prefer courtship over competitiveness

Anti-smoking TV ads with anger more effective

Anti-smoking TV ads with anger more effective
Anger works better than sadness in anti-smoking television advertisements that appeal to viewers emotions.  

Anti-smoking TV ads with anger more effective

What! Even a man's odour can make rats stressed!

What! Even a man's odour can make rats stressed!
Know why, to the delight of your spouse, that stubborn mouse runs the moment he sees you entering the house from office? Because even the smell of a man could elicit fear in mice and rats, a fascinating research has revealed.

What! Even a man's odour can make rats stressed!